This blog post explains in detail an example I worked out for the vRealize Orchestrator mini-workshop I have been teaching in the Benelux Summer School. If you did not attend and need an introduction to Orchestrator, have a look at my Orchestrator resources mindmap. I especially recommend the free video course to get you started ! If you do not immediately have an environment to try this out, I recommend you use the Hands-on Labs. HOL-SDC-1421, for example, has a complete Orchestrator environment. Click the Start menu, VMware to find the Orchestrator client.

Intro.

IFTTT (“If-This-Then-That”) is a simple but very effective programming system for everyone on the web. For free ! You get “channels” to interact with a service, like Instagram or Philips Hue lights, there are tons of possible channels. With a “Do recipe” you can quickly create your own interaction. An “If recipe” runs in the background and automates stuff for you. I have for example a recipe I use all the time: when I see an interesting tweet I want to save (I use Evernote religously) I just favorite it. An If recipe then automatically stores it in Evernote. With content sorted in certain fields.

Admins are always looking to have easy alerting in case of problems on smart phones, pagers,… How cool would it be to interface anything that lives in vRealize Orchestrator (vRO) with IFTTT ? You can send alerts to Android or iOS native notifications, or change your Hue lights to red if you have a performance problem, or… whatever you can come up with.

IFTTT now comes with a channel to basically interface anything that has a REST API interface: Maker channel. It can receive messages on a trigger or send web requests. And did I mention all of this is free ?

Building it.

So I thought it would be cool for the workshop to build a workflow that sends notifications to my iPhone from vRO. You can enhance this to send any notification, like SNMP alerts using the SNMP module. What we need to do is:

Build an IF recipe in IFTTT that always listens to vRO sending a POST request to the Maker channel API interface.

Register IFTTT as a RESTHost in our Orchestrator inventory.

Register the POST action in Orchestrator as a RESTOperation.

Use the “Invoke REST operation” workflow in your own workflow.

There are of course several ways to do this. You could write everything in one scriptable action in javascript. I think however that leveraging the inventory in Orchestrator is key to easy management of your resources and readability of your workflows. You can see if a REST Host or vCenter server is online in your environment separately from your workflows. That is a big advantage. Also if you use these resources in your workflows, as inputs for example, it gives you a bullet-proof way to select only viable resources, like a vRA IaaS server.

IF Recipe.

You need to activate the Maker channel in IFTTT to get a personal key and do REST calls.

I am sending events called “vCO” to recognize things coming from vCO, so you need to create a recipe that triggers on those messages and passes them along. I send them to iOS notifications.

Register IFTTT as RESTHost.

As said I registered the Maker channel IFTTT host in Orchestrator as a REST host. There is a workflow to do this called “Add a REST host” in Library/HTTP-REST/configuration. The REST library is installed by default in vRealize Orchestrator, so you just provide the right parameters. In my case I need a proxy to get out on the internet.

Register POST action.

In the same way we added a REST host to vCO, we add a REST operation to that host with the name VCOevent, using the workflow “Add a REST operation”. You recognize the URL template as the url string I have to send to IFTTT with my personal key, “vCO” trigger and one parameter. You can of course use other events and more parameters and change the text.

vCO Workflow for IFTTT.

My worflow now consists of one embedded workflow “Invoke REST operation”. You can download it here, import it in your Orchestrator and adapt it for your own use. The REST operation/host has a default value in attributes as defined previously. I only have to pass a parameter. In Orchestrator an extremely handy tool is visual binding, which helps you see how parameters link from one module to the next.

Usage.

Now if you run the workflow a message will magically appear on my iPhone ! Note that the Orchestrator client is great for debugging: each time you run a workflow a token is created with logs. You can check that the workflow ran and that the status code for the REST operation is 200 if successful.

As promised in the “vRealize Orchestrator mini workshop” I am running in the VMware Benelux and Netherlands Summer schools, I publish here a resource mindmap to learn about vRO. It is a pdf file with clickable links, view below or download here.

Right on cue as promised we announced a lot of important new versions in the vRealize Suite for cloud operations. I will list here a reference to all documentation and download sites. cloud automation in a separate update.

We are pleased to announce the General Availability of vRealize Configuration Manager (VCM) 5.7.3, a key part of the VMware vRealize Operations Management Suite that automates configuration management across virtual, physical and cloud environments.

Organizations can use VCM to continuously audit the configurations of VMware infrastructure (including VMware ESX®, ESXi™, vCenter, vCloud® Director™ and vCloud® Networking and Security) as well as Windows, Linux and UNIX operating systems. Configuration compliance can be maintained against internal standards, security best practices, vendor hardening guidelines, and even regulatory mandates.

This release delivers critical enhancements requested by our customers, field and PSO teams to improve vSphere support, speed time to value, and extend capabilities for OS configuration management.

Highlights of this release include:

Updated Platform Support for the VCM Collector

Installation of the Collector and SQL Server components on Windows Server 2012 and 2012R2 is now supported

Existing installations of VCM can be upgraded or migrated to Windows Server 2012 or 2012R2 as part of the installation process for 5.7.3

Added Support for New Versions of Client Platforms

Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7

CentOS 7

Oracle Enterprise Linux 7

vSphere 6 Ready

VCM 5.7.3 will support vSphere 6 upon its release

Support for older versions of vSphere is unchanged in VCM 5.7.3 (vSphere 4.0U1 and later)

Hopefully you know about our visual orchestration engine that is shipped with vCenter and plays a crucial role in vR Automation Center. for more info visit the excellent VCO team site. A new release is just out:

vCenter Orchestrator 5.1.3

GA Date:4 December 2014

What’s new?

This release of vCenter Orchestrator introduces a number of improvements and bug fixes.